This patch introduces an example application to demonstrate how to use
GPIO driver APIs to manipulate interrupt pins.
The application uses default galileo pinmux initialization and sets
the GPIO 5 (IO2) as output pin and GPIO 6 (IO3) as interrupt. It toggles
the output pin stat at every half second in order to emulate an interrupt.
This triggers an interrupt and the application callback is called.
This patch introduces an example application to demonstrate how to use
GPIO driver APIs to manipulate input pins.
The application uses default galileo pinmux initialization and sets the
GPIO 5 (IO2) as output pin and GPIO 6 (IO3) as input. It toggles the
output pin state at every half second and checks the value on input pin.
This patch adds an example application that shows how to use I2C driver
APIs to communicate with LSM9DS0 sensor. At every 5 seconds, the
application reads the "Who Am I" register from gyroscope sensor and
prints if the register value matches the expected value.
This patch introduces an example application to demonstrate how to use
GPIO driver APIs to manipulate output pins. The application sets the
GPIO 4 pin as output pin and toggles its state at every half second.
This commit adds a very simple example which is useful to verify
that all timers APIs are working. There are 3 protothreads running,
the first process tests etimer, timer and stimer APIs, the second
process tests the ctimer APIs, and the third one tests the rtimer
APIs.
The peripheral core clocks of the PWM timers are gated in PM1+, so these
power modes must be disabled if a PWM timer is running. Use
lpm_register_peripheral() to handle this automatically and dynamically.
Signed-off-by: Benoît Thébaudeau <benoit.thebaudeau.dev@gmail.com>